Genetic engineering of animals: Ethical issues, including welfare concerns

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Here is a summary of the journal article at a 9th grade reading level:

Genetic Engineering of Animals: Ethical Issues[edit | edit source]

What is Genetic Engineering of Animals?[edit | edit source]

Genetic engineering means changing an animal's genes using technology. It includes:

- Adding new genes - Removing genes - Altering existing genes

Some examples are glow-in-the-dark fish, hypoallergenic cats, and cloning animals.

Why Genetically Engineer Animals?[edit | edit source]

There are many reasons to genetically engineer animals:

- As pets - like tailless cats or hypoallergenic dogs.

- For conservation - cloning extinct or endangered species.

- For food - chickens that grow bigger or cows that make healthier milk.

- For medicine - mice with human diseases to test new drugs.

- For organ transplants - pigs with humanized organs.

What are the Animal Welfare Concerns?[edit | edit source]

Genetic engineering can cause pain, distress or health problems for the animals:

- Procedures like surgery to transfer embryos can be invasive.

- Many animals are used to create a single genetically engineered line.

- Effects of genetic changes can be unpredictable and cause suffering.

- Cloned animals often have abnormalities and health problems.

There are efforts to refine techniques to reduce animal suffering. But welfare impacts remain a concern.

Beyond Animal Welfare - What are the Ethical Issues?[edit | edit source]

Some ethical issues go beyond animal welfare:

- Altering an animal's 'essence' or purpose.

- Violating the integrity or dignity of species.

- Unbalancing the relationship between humans and animals.

- Patenting animals raises concerns about commercialization.

Views differ on whether limits should be set on genetic engineering animals. It involves complex ethical questions.

What is the Role of Veterinarians?[edit | edit source]

Veterinarians should:

- Understand the context, uses and ethical issues.

- Monitor animal health and welfare.

- Inform the public and policy discussions.

- Voice concerns from an animal health perspective.

Careful oversight is needed as genetically engineered animals become commercialized.

Key References[edit | edit source]

- MacArthur et al. 2006 - Impacts of animal breeding on welfare - Weaver & Morris 2005 - Risks of genetic modification - Rollin 2003 - Telos and genetic engineering - Schuppli & Weary 2010 - Public attitudes on genetic modification